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[Commlist] CFP: “Critical and Creative Engagements with Petro-Media” / special issue of Imaginations
Sat Oct 03 08:04:33 GMT 2020
Call for Submissions: “Critical and Creative Engagements with
Petro-Media” special issue of Imaginations
Appel à soumissions : Numéro spécial d'Imaginations sur « Les
Engagements critiques et créatifs avec les pétro-média »
Guest edited by Rachel W. Jekanowski (Memorial University) & Emily Roehl
(Texas State University)
SUBMISSION DEADLINE: DECEMBER 10, 2020
This special issue of Imaginations will concentrate on media engaging
with petroleum and its attendant socio-political and economic
structures. Drawing on technology and media studies, energy humanities
scholarship, and a range of methods in visual and cultural studies, the
contributors will theorize contemporary and historical uses of media to
resist and facilitate petroleum infrastructures. Building on
Imaginations’ long-standing engagement with petrocultures scholarship,
including their 2012 special issue “Sighting Oil” (Sheena Wilson and
Andrew Pendakis, eds.), this issue will mobilize critiques of corporate
petro-media with decolonial methods from a range of disciplines,
focusing on the interlacing of oil, settler colonialism, Indigenous
resurgence, and media production. The issue will consist of
peer-reviewed essays from scholars and practitioners, artist interviews
and contributions (including samples of multimedia work with
accompanying artists statements), and a review section (including a
comparative book review essay, curatorial reviews and responses to
digital exhibitions in the age of COVID-19, etc.). We are particularly
invested in featuring research-creation and media-rich scholarship.
We invite submissions that take up different facets of media production
by Indigenous, immigrant, and settler artists, activists, and corporate
representatives to examine the complex entanglements of cultural
production, settler colonialism, and fossil fuel extraction. Given our
location on occupied Indigenous territories where we work as researchers
and educators, we assert that energy developments are always already
implicated within histories of colonialism and white settlement in North
America. Critically, we invite contributions that include and foreground
visual media in their analyses, featuring original videos, archival
photographs and film stills, and photographs of authors’ art installations.
We invite submissions that engage with the following topics (including
but not limited to):
* the way media networks and ways of viewing the world support the
extraction, production, and consumption of fossil fuels and interact
with the financial and socio-political systems the production of oil
requires;
* the way media, like energy infrastructures, are used as conduits for
the transportation and transmission of fuel, people, capital, and ideas
about sovereignty, identity, futurity, and relationships to the nonhuman
world;
* the way various media—from corporate films, digital photography,
games, and television advertisements, to activist protests and social
media—have alternatively been used to uphold, legitimize, critique, and
resist energy practices within settler colonial nations like Canada and
the United States.
Submissions are also welcome from the following fields and approaches
(including but not limited to):
- cultural studies
- energy studies
- critical Indigenous studies
- critical settler colonial studies
- decolonial approaches to media
- environmental humanities
- Indigenous sovereignty
- film and media studies
- literary studies
- multimedia and digital arts
- petrocultures
- research-creation methods
- social and environmental justice
- feminist, queer, and posthumanist approaches to petro-media
- interventions from critical race studies
In sum, this special issue will contribute to discussions within media
and literature studies about the imbrication of energy, communication,
and art, while foregrounding Indigenous resurgence, energy justice
movements, and deepening attention to the asymmetrical effects of
climate change on communities and environments.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Recognizing the challenges of producing work during a pandemic, and
reflecting the editors’ commitment to experimenting with mixed
methodologies and media-rich scholarship, this special issue will
feature shorter research essays alongside artist submissions and
research-creation. Research essays should be 3000-5000 words; artist
contributions and curatorial reviews can be 500-2000 words. Citations
should adhere to the MLA Style Guide.
All submissions must be sent to (imaginations /at/ ualberta.ca)
<mailto:(imaginations /at/ ualberta.ca)> and copied to (mrln /at/ yorku.ca)
<mailto:(mrln /at/ yorku.ca)> and (bbellamy /at/ ualberta.ca)
<mailto:(bbellamy /at/ ualberta.ca)>. Please include a separate sheet with
short biographical and contact information. Media can be emailed as an
attachment or accessible by hyperlink.
The Imaginations Journal style sheet is accessible here
<http://imaginations.glendon.yorku.ca/?page_id=7034>.
SUBMISSION DEADLINE IS DECEMBER 10, 2020.
We plan to notify contributors as to the status of their submissions by
May 2021 at the latest. The special issue is tentatively planned for
publication in Fall 2021.
CONTACT US
Please direct questions and inquiries to issue editors Emily Roehl
((e.a.roehl /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(e.a.roehl /at/ gmail.com)>) and Rachel W.
Jekanowski ((rjekanowski /at/ mun.ca) <mailto:(rjekanowski /at/ mun.ca)>).
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